Contents

Conception

Seventies' Seattle not caring about the Seahawks

One day in the seventies, the NFL decided that it was lacking in teams. Their remedy to the predicament was to create two new teams. Instead of placing these teams in relevant cities, they decided to award the cities of Seattle and Tampa Bay with them. Out of this decision, the Seattle Seahawks and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers came into existence in 1976. The cities' people did not care.

Early History

Due to the citizens' not caring, the Seattle Seahawks were irrelevant for nearly thirty years. The only notable happening in the franchise's early years was Steve Largent, notable for being the only talented white wide receiver post-civil rights movement. He has since entered the Hall of Fame, and provides white people hope to this day.

Their One Successful Year

The Walrus at a press conference

The Seattle Seahawks finally decided to be significant in 2005, the year in which they made their first and only Super Bowl appearance. They won thirteen games, and managed to set the record for most points scored in a single season (a record that now belongs to the New England Patriots). They also set a team record: they hired their first walrus at head coach. Their key players were running back Shaun Alexander, and a bald guy at quarterback. Under theirs and the walrus's leadership, they reached Super Bowl XL.

Super Bowl XL

They faced the combined forces of the Pittsburgh Steelers and the NFL Zebras in Super Bowl XL. Despite the fact that the Seahawks initially won the game, an anomaly brought about by the Zebras led to a Steelers victory. Somehow the aforementioned anomaly provided the Zebras with magical powers, with which they turned a goal-line stand into a Steelers' touchdown. Furthermore, they used their arcane ability to perform a vanishing act on a Seahawks' touchdown. Footage even shows them summoning phantom pass interference calls against the Seahawks. The final score was 21-10 Steelers/Zebras.

Current Team

The Walrus and the bald guy have since left the Seahawks. These departures ultimately led to the team's hiatus in 2010. Currently, a team bearing their name has taken their place in the NFL. The origins of this new team are unknown, but experts believe them to be a division three college football team. There have been no announcements as to when the actual Seattle Seahawks will return to the league, as they have pinned their hopes on fad qb Russell Wilson and a read option offense that every defensive coordinator will figure out come 2013.

the 12th man

It is widely known that the seahawks have 12 fans, most of which are inbred trailer park varieties. These 12 fans and their collective 12 teeth are what the rest of the league knows as the 12th man.

Tarvaris Jackson

The hiatus was originally unannounced, and fans knew nothing about it until 2011. However, fans noticed a slight peculiarity about the quarterback -- he had hair. Recently found evidence claims that his name is Tarvaris Jackson, and that he was mistaken for an NFL quarterback by the new team's management. He was released in June of 2012 and the the Buffalo Losers signed him.